Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

SWEDEN, BRITAIN debate paths taken on coronaviru­s.

- WILLIAM BOOTH

LONDON — Now that the first waves of infections and deaths have peaked and lockdowns are being lifted, scientists around the world have begun to skirmish over which countries have pursued the best strategies to protect their people. One of the most contentiou­s confrontat­ions has been between leading infectious-disease specialist­s in Sweden and Britain, who each claim their approach is right.

The two countries went in different directions. After weekslong delay, Britain ordered a strict lockdown in late March. Sweden has glided along with much more relaxed, voluntary guidance, trusting its citizens to use their common sense and maintain reasonable social distancing.

London has been a ghost town, its economy shattered like most. But all through March, April and early May, people could still dine at restaurant­s in Stockholm or drink a cold Pilsener on a sunny patio bar. Swedish children go to elementary and middle school. Shops and gyms, factories and yoga studios are open — often thronged. Throughout the pandemic, life has looked much more “normal” in Sweden.

Leaders of Sweden and Britain claim they have been “guided by the science” — and both countries have seen soaring numbers of deaths.

So are scientists in both countries wrong? Or right, but in different ways? Or is it too soon to know what is really going on?

The former chief epidemiolo­gist for Sweden, Johan Giesecke, an internatio­nally recognized expert who advises the World Health Organizati­on, has been blasting away at the British government’s abrupt decision to reverse itself and mandate a complete lockdown on March 23.

Initially, Britain signaled it would pursue a go-slow approach to allow the pathogen to circulate more widely and begin to create what virologist­s call “herd immunity.”

“Our aim is not to stop everyone getting it. You can’t do that. And it’s not desirable, because you want to get some immunity in the population. We need to have immunity to protect ourselves in the future,” Britain’s chief scientific adviser, Patrick Vallance, said March 12.

Giesecke says Britain was on the right path, alongside Sweden. But it all came to a full stop with the appearance of a “famous paper” by epidemiolo­gist Neil Ferguson and his Covid-19 Response Team at Imperial College London, published March 16. Ferguson and his team are seen as a gold standard by many epidemiolo­gists, and their paper contained jaw-dropping numbers.

Giesecke argues that Ferguson’s mathematic­al simulation shocked the British government and persuaded it to do “a 180-degree U-turn” and to panic.

The Ferguson model was quickly embraced at the highest levels on both sides of the Atlantic, first by Downing Street and then the White House.

If nothing at all were done to stop this novel virus from infecting a previously unexposed population, then 510,000 people in Britain and 2.2 million in the United States would die in a tsunami of infections that would overwhelm each country’s hospitals, Ferguson’s group asserted.

But Britain was never going to do nothing.

‘MITIGATION STRATEGY’

Instead, Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government first proposed a middle way, with less-than-drastic measures, a “mitigation” strategy much like the one Sweden has pursued.

Ferguson and his modelers, however, warned that even such a mitigation strategy, which focused on slowing but not necessaril­y stopping epidemic spread, meant that 250,000 would still die in Britain. Public health officials quickly imagined thousands of breathless patients succumbing in hospital parking lots, as emergency room physicians were forced to ration access to ICU beds and precious ventilator­s.

And so Johnson’s government ultimately went with a full lockdown, an allin attempt to suppress the spread of the virus as much as possible. Those who support lockdowns say the main thing Britain did wrong was wait too long, giving the virus a significan­t head start.

Giesecke has been unusually blunt in calling the Ferguson model “not very good” and “overly pessimisti­c.” He noted it was neither peer-reviewed nor published in a scientific journal and said in a webinar briefing conducted by Chatham House, the London think tank, that he thought someone should write a book about “how a not very scientific paper changed the policy of an entire country.”

In an interview with The Washington Post, Giesecke said the Imperial College forecasts were almost hysterical and the Ferguson paper so fundamenta­lly flawed by debatable assumption­s — for example, the percentage of people who were asymptomat­ic but still infectious — that “it loses all value” as a predictive tool.

Scientists fight all the time, but this debate among top-flight infectious disease modelers in Stockholm and London is eyeball-grabbing because it has burst into the open on Twitter and Zoom chat, and think-tank teleconfer­ence and on YouTube, most prominentl­y in a duet of interviews conducted for the online magazine UnHerd.com by its editor, Freddie Sayers.

In that interview, Ferguson fired back at his Swedish critics, claiming that “the majority of epidemiolo­gists in the world support my position.” Even in Sweden, some scientists charged that their government was “playing Russian roulette” with the population.

Ferguson countered that the Swedish government made “a decision most other countries would not tolerate,” meaning to let the virus run more free. He said of Giesecke, “He’s basically saying we should allow all these old people to die — because he doesn’t believe we can keep these measures in place.”

Ferguson said that “Sweden is still seeing increases in deaths and cases” and that Sweden’s mortality rates were “approachin­g New York City,” which has seen the greatest overall fatalities in the United States so far. He said Britain, by contrast, “acted in time to keep the nation from being overwhelme­d.”

‘ERROR OF JUDGMENT’

Ferguson, who did not respond to requests for an interview with the Post, had been guiding Britain through its epidemic until this week. He gave up his role with the British government’s Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencie­s, which has been steering policy, after the Daily Telegraph newspaper reported he had broken social-distancing measures by meeting with his married lover at his home. Ferguson has acknowledg­ed making an “error of judgment.”

The British prime minister is certainly a convert to Ferguson’s forecast. In Johnson’s first news conference after being stricken by the virus, he argued that Britain avoided “an uncontroll­able and catastroph­ic” epidemic that could have caused half a million deaths, and he cited Ferguson’s worst-case-scenario numbers.

President Donald Trump, too, has alluded to the Ferguson forecasts, speaking on the millions of lives he claims his policies have saved.

The pandemic remains far from over. But at this moment, Britain’s death toll of more than 31,000 is the highest in Europe. Meanwhile, deaths in Sweden are the highest in Scandinavi­a, with over 3,100 killed by the virus so far. Britain’s population is 66 million, and Sweden’s is 10 million.

Comparing the two countries, Britain is reporting 460 deaths per 1 million people. Sweden is at 298.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States